There are lots of differences, but the main one is that Oak mostly are deciduous and Pines are evergreens.
It depends on the size of the plywood sheets.
depends on the size of the plywood...but I'd say around 40 feet of containers worth
You need to cut a 9 foot piece of plywood into 12 inch sections. Every cut also removes 1/8 inch. How many 12 inch sections can you get out of the 9 foot piece of plywood?
6mm plywood weighs 8.406 pounds per sq m or 3.82 Kgs per sq m
88 sheets of plywood provided that standard size sheets are used(4ft x 8ft)
Any strong wood. In the US, softwood plywood is generally made from Douglas fir or southern yellow pine. Most hardwood plywood is "veneer core." This means they make sheets of plywood from poplar--an inexpensive hardwood but plenty good for plywood--then put veneers of a more expensive hardwood on both sides of the finished sheet. If you run into oak "marine plywood" all the plies are made from oak. Oak is extremely hard to make into good plywood cores because it is so hard, so oak marine plywood is really expensive.
Any strong wood. In the US, softwood plywood is generally made from Douglas fir or southern yellow pine. Most hardwood plywood is "veneer core." This means they make sheets of plywood from poplar--an inexpensive hardwood but plenty good for plywood--then put veneers of a more expensive hardwood on both sides of the finished sheet. If you run into oak "marine plywood" all the plies are made from oak. Oak is extremely hard to make into good plywood cores because it is so hard, so oak marine plywood is really expensive.
Oak wood
Tables, Floors, plywood; loads of things are made out of oak wood.
oak
That is plywood that has layers bonded together with resin. Nine ply marine is bonded together and it may have an oak veneer like the seat board in a bow window.
Plywood may be made from hardwoods, softwoods, or a combination of the two. Some common hardwoods include ash, maple, mahogany, oak, and teak. The most common softwood used to make plywood in the United States is Douglas fir, although several varieties of pine, cedar, spruce, and redwood are also used.
Hardwood Timber, Softwood Timber and Plywood
Plywood was first developed in 1905 in St. John, Oregon. Plywood comes in different grades depending on the quality of surfaces and the type of adhesive.
Plywood prices rose 67 percent between 1991 and 1993
Water Oak Pin Oak red oak white oak
Plywood is made up of many different layers. These individual layers are called "piles" or "veneers".